AshT_200
17-04-2003, 13:30
This is why they have AQIS (Australian Quarantine Inspection Service)
Creepy - apparently it's completely true. The source is AQIS in Adelaide.
A bloke and his family were on holiday in the States and went to Mexico
for a week. As he is an avid cactus fan he bought a rare and expensive
cactus there, it was about a metre high and cost about A$500.00
He got it back to Australia where the customs people said it must stay
in quarantine for 3 months, for a cost of A$800 or so. He finally got his
cactus home and planted it in his backyard where over time it grew to about
2 metres or so in height.
One evening after a beautiful warm spring day he was out watering his
garden and thought he might give the cactus a light spray. This he did
and was amazed to see the plant shiver all over, he gave it another light
spray and it shivered and shook again. All its arms moved. He was puzzled
so he rang the council who put him on to the state gardens.
>>
After a few transfers he got the state's foremost cactus expert who asked him many pointed questions. How tall is it?
How tall was it when you got it? Has it grown well? Has it flowered? What type of spines? etc, etc.
Finally he asked a most disturbing question, "Is your family in the house?"
The guy answered yes, the cactus expert said, "Get them out of the house, NOW. Get on to the front nature strip and wait for me, I will be there in 15 minutes."
Ten minutes later, 2 fire trucks, two cop cars and an ambulance came screaming around the corner at the end of the street and stopped out the front of the house. A fireman got out and came up to him, "Are you the guy with the cactus?"
"I am" he said. The fireman turns to the truck and says, "Come on Dave". A guy jumped out of the fire truck wearing what looks like a space suit, a breathing cylinder and mask attached and what looked like a scuba backpack on with a large hose attached.
Stay here, says the first fireman, and they both headed for the backyard.
This was too much for the bloke so he ran around after them and found
the guy in the space suit was firing at his prize cactus with a
flame-thrower; he sprayed it up and down with this huge flame which fried
everything within a ten metre radius of the cactus, caught fire to the back
fence and set off the neighbours trees as well.
The guy of course was having kittens,
"What the heck is going on?" etc.
After about ten minutes the flame-thrower man stopped; the cactus stood smoking and spitting, half the fence was gone, and the garden was entirely rooted.
Just then the cactus expert appears and laid a calming hand on the guy's shoulder. "What the hell is going on?" says the bloke.
"Let me show you." says the cactus man. He went over to the cactus and picked away at a crusty bit. It was almost entirely hollow and filled with tiger-striped bird-eating tarantula spiders, about the size of two hands span.
The story was that this type of spider lays eggs in this type of cactus and they hatch and live in it as they and it grow to full size. When they are all grown to full size they release themselves. The cactus just explodes and about 150 plate size tiger striped hairy spiders are flung from it, dispersing everywhere of course. They had been just ready to pop, can you imagine?
The aftermath was that his house and the two adjoining houses had to be vacated and fumigated and sealed up for two weeks; yellow police tape was put up outside the whole area and no one was allowed in for two weeks.
Then the all clear was given and they moved back in.
Urghh!
Creepy - apparently it's completely true. The source is AQIS in Adelaide.
A bloke and his family were on holiday in the States and went to Mexico
for a week. As he is an avid cactus fan he bought a rare and expensive
cactus there, it was about a metre high and cost about A$500.00
He got it back to Australia where the customs people said it must stay
in quarantine for 3 months, for a cost of A$800 or so. He finally got his
cactus home and planted it in his backyard where over time it grew to about
2 metres or so in height.
One evening after a beautiful warm spring day he was out watering his
garden and thought he might give the cactus a light spray. This he did
and was amazed to see the plant shiver all over, he gave it another light
spray and it shivered and shook again. All its arms moved. He was puzzled
so he rang the council who put him on to the state gardens.
>>
After a few transfers he got the state's foremost cactus expert who asked him many pointed questions. How tall is it?
How tall was it when you got it? Has it grown well? Has it flowered? What type of spines? etc, etc.
Finally he asked a most disturbing question, "Is your family in the house?"
The guy answered yes, the cactus expert said, "Get them out of the house, NOW. Get on to the front nature strip and wait for me, I will be there in 15 minutes."
Ten minutes later, 2 fire trucks, two cop cars and an ambulance came screaming around the corner at the end of the street and stopped out the front of the house. A fireman got out and came up to him, "Are you the guy with the cactus?"
"I am" he said. The fireman turns to the truck and says, "Come on Dave". A guy jumped out of the fire truck wearing what looks like a space suit, a breathing cylinder and mask attached and what looked like a scuba backpack on with a large hose attached.
Stay here, says the first fireman, and they both headed for the backyard.
This was too much for the bloke so he ran around after them and found
the guy in the space suit was firing at his prize cactus with a
flame-thrower; he sprayed it up and down with this huge flame which fried
everything within a ten metre radius of the cactus, caught fire to the back
fence and set off the neighbours trees as well.
The guy of course was having kittens,
"What the heck is going on?" etc.
After about ten minutes the flame-thrower man stopped; the cactus stood smoking and spitting, half the fence was gone, and the garden was entirely rooted.
Just then the cactus expert appears and laid a calming hand on the guy's shoulder. "What the hell is going on?" says the bloke.
"Let me show you." says the cactus man. He went over to the cactus and picked away at a crusty bit. It was almost entirely hollow and filled with tiger-striped bird-eating tarantula spiders, about the size of two hands span.
The story was that this type of spider lays eggs in this type of cactus and they hatch and live in it as they and it grow to full size. When they are all grown to full size they release themselves. The cactus just explodes and about 150 plate size tiger striped hairy spiders are flung from it, dispersing everywhere of course. They had been just ready to pop, can you imagine?
The aftermath was that his house and the two adjoining houses had to be vacated and fumigated and sealed up for two weeks; yellow police tape was put up outside the whole area and no one was allowed in for two weeks.
Then the all clear was given and they moved back in.
Urghh!